People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXIV
No.
16 April 18, 2010 |
European
Satellite to Measure
Global Warming Impact
Raghu
EARLIER articles in these
columns have shown how an
odd careless remark, a few errors in judgement, a lapse in scientific
rigour
and peer review procedures, as happened over the clearly erroneous
prediction
that Himalayan glaciers would melt by 2035, are pounced upon by climate
sceptics
and corporate lobbies to undermine the scientific understanding of
societally
induced climate change and hence undercut efforts to bring about policy
changes
to avert the impending crisis. This despite massive and mounting
amounts of
evidence to show that, if anything, the problem is even more serious
than the
extant scientific consensus says it is. For instance, many recent
studies on
polar ice have tended to show that ice cover at both poles is shrinking
faster,
and that consequently sea levels would rise even more, and more
quickly, than
previously thought.
SHRINKING
ICE COVER
Diminishing ice
cover is often referred to as clear evidence of global warming.
Further, since
the large quantity of terrestrial ice is known to play an important
role not
only with regard to sea level but also to regulating global and
regional climate,
changes in ice cover are closely watched and carefully studied. For
many years,
satellites have been mapping the area covered by ice and this data has
formed
the basis of much prediction on the extent and impact of global
warming. For
instance, the Fourth (and latest) Assessment Report of the IPCC
(IPCC/AR4) in
2007 noted that �satellite data since 1978 show that annual average
Arctic
sea-ice extent has shrunk by 2.7 per cent per decade� and based on that
projected a rise in sea levels by 28-43
cm by 2100. But a subsequent authoritative report titled Antarctic
Climate
Change and the Environment released in 2009 by the highly regarded
Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research projected a significantly
higher
sea-level rise of 1.4 metres by the next century!
Reduction in
polar ice cover is most dramatically seen in the Arctic and especially
around
There is thus little doubt that
ice cover is
shrinking. The real question is how much? So far we have been talking
only
about the area covered by ice, not about the total volume or quantity
of ice. To
get from area to volume, one needs to measure the thickness of the ice.
The
Cryosat-2 satellite (so named because it seeks to study the cryosphere
or parts
of the earth covered by ice) was launched by the European Space Agency
(ESA) on
April 8 last week to do precisely this at a total mission cost of 180
million dollars
(Rs 870 crore).
PROBLEM AND
CHALLENGE
Much of the
solar radiation reaching the earth�s surface is reflected back to the
atmosphere and to outer space. Permanent ice-sheets, especially when
covered by
snow, have high �albedo� (literally whiteness or more accurately
reflectivity) and
reflect around 80 per cent of sunlight. This helps the ice to stay
frozen and
plays an important role in maintaining the heat balance of our planet.
However,
when ice cover begins to melt, the albedo effect gets diminished, thus
reducing
the proportion of solar radiation reflected back and hence increased
absorption
of heat by the ice, leading in turn to what is termed �positive
feedback,� that
is, increased ice melt and greater warming of the earth. Under normal
seasonal
variation, vast amounts of ice melt every summer and freeze again in
the winter
but, with global warming, melt rates are getting higher while the
re-freezing
is slowing down.
Polar ice is of two types: ice
that covers land
(icecaps, defined as less than 50,000 sq km in area, or ice-sheets,
larger than
that, although the former term is commonly used to describe both), and
sea ice
(formed by freezing seawater). These two forms of ice behave
differently, have
differing impact on climate and will affect the planet in diverse ways
as they
melt due to global warming and pose distinctive challenges for
measuring their
thickness.
Seasonal
changes of sea-ice are known to
have a significant influence on ocean circulation patterns called
�thermohaline
circulation.� When ice melts, freshwater enters into the surrounding
ocean
reducing its salinity and therefore its density. In reverse, as
seawater cools
and sea ice forms, the salinity and density increases, causing the
surface
waters to sink down. Continuous such action drives deep ocean currents
towards
the equator and away from the polar regions, in response to which a
return flow
of warmer and less dense water is drawn towards the poles from higher
latitudes
towards the equator. These ocean currents have a profound influence on
climate
and weather. One of the more important such warm water currents is the
Gulf
Stream from the Gulf of Mexico towards the Arctic which keeps Britain
several
degrees warmer than other northern European countries. With climate
change and
rise in average temperatures globally, and volumes of sea-ice
declining, the
Gulf Stream would become significantly weaker, leading to much colder
conditions in regions on both sides of the northern Atlantic (thus
showing that
�global warming� can be a misleading term!). There are even
apprehensions that
at some particular point, the mechanism governing these important ocean
currents could get �switched off,� leading to catastrophe, the subject
of a
recent
It
must be remembered, though, that melting
of sea-ice has no impact on sea levels since the ice is already
floating in
water.
Unlike
sea-ice which is only a few metres
thick, icecaps or ice-sheets over land, such as those that blanket
Antarctica
or
However,
to better understand and make predictions
about these and related phenomena, scientists need to know much more
about the
total volume of ice which in turn needs measurement of its thickness.
Sea-ice
being thin, its thickness can be
measured directly, such as by drilling into it from above, but this
method can
only provide localised information over a small area. Thickness of
icecaps, on
the other hand, needs to be estimated by measuring the height of its
surface
relative to the land below, not an easy task by any means.
CRYOSAT-2
ESA�s Cryosat-2 is the second
attempt at undertaking
this task, the first mission in October 2005 having failed right at
launch due
to a software problem affecting the rocket. This time, ESA used
The spacecraft orbit is the
steepest hitherto, taking
it as close to the poles as possible. NASA�s ICEsat, with a laser
altimeter,
flew in a high inclination orbit of 86� but Cryosat-2 goes even better
with an
orbital path of 88� north and south on each orbit, covering most of the
Arctic
and Greenland coastline of which only 10 per cent is covered by current
satellites. This clearly non- sun-synchronous orbit requires that the
spacecraft�s solar panels are tilted so that it can receive maximum
possible
sunlight and also that it carries newly-designed high capacity
batteries.
The satellite carries as its
primary payload an
advanced SAR-Interferometric Radar Altimeter (SIRAL). SAR stands for
Synthetic
Aperture Radar which provides high-resolution and simulated 3-D images
even
with small antennae by creating a rapid sequence of images while in
motion
which are then computationally put together. (See People�s
Democracy, May 3, 2009 for a more detailed explanation.)
To complement the altimeter, the payload includes a radio receiver
called DORIS
(Doppler Orbit and Radio Positioning Integration by Satellite) and a
laser
retro-reflector. The International Laser Ranging Service or ILRS, a
global
network of laser ranging stations, will support the mission. To provide
the
datum or reference position of the satellite itself against which all
other
positional readings are read to obtain absolute data, the satellite
relies on
the oldest navigational method, namely the position of stars which it
continuously monitors through three star-trackers.
The spacecraft�s instrumentation
provides accurate
data on sea-ice �freeboard� or height of floating ice above sea level,
and on
the elevation of ice sheets. The SAR technique enables high resolution
data in
the direction of movement of the satellite. In conventional radar
altimeters,
distance to the top of the ice would be measured by the radar echo off
the
nearest point on the surface, but on sloping surfaces such as on land
and on
the edges of ice caps, there is no reference point to indicate where on
the
slope this nearest point is. The SAR�s series of multiple images taken
at 10
times quicker intervals than conventional radars enables determination
of the
position and height of the surface in the along-track direction while
left and
right echo positions are provided by the SAR-interferometry mode which
provides
the angle of the returning echo, thus all together giving a three
dimensional
picture and accurate measurement of the thickness of the ice.
As with all
remote sensing, error correction and calibration has to be done through
comparison
with ground data both before and after launch.
The
An interesting sidelight is that
the launcher that put
Cryosat-2 into orbit is a modified Soviet-era SS-II ballistic missile,
only slightly
modified for commercial use. And earlier in the week, NASA also
launched a
modified Global Hawk, the US Air Force�s most potent Unmanned Aerial
Vehicle
(UAV) spycraft that can fly at high altitudes of over 60,000 feet for a
very
long time, to monitor sea-ice and ice sheets. If countries so decide,
all
knowledge and technology can indeed be harnessed for the collective
benefit of
humankind. Talk about turning swords into ploughshares!